This fixes the warning "src/ is missing from source.."
Change-Id: I166e3a6a3d5230e4110d3283ec4dbc7d1dfe6732
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
cgit changed the --depth parameter to mean the total depth of history
rather than the depth of ancestors to be returned [1]. JGit still uses
the latter meaning, so update it to match cgit.
depth=0 still means a non-shallow clone. depth=1 now means only the
wants rather than the wants and their direct parents.
This is accomplished by changing the semantic meaning of "depth" in
UploadPack and PackWriter to mean the total depth of history desired,
while keeping "depth" in DepthWalk.{RevWalk,ObjectWalk} to mean
the depth of traversal. Thus UploadPack and PackWriter always
initialize their DepthWalks with "depth-1".
[1] upload-pack: fix off-by-one depth calculation in shallow clone
https://code.googlesource.com/git/+/682c7d2f1a2d1a5443777237450505738af2ff1a
Change-Id: I87ed3c0f56c37e3491e367a41f5e555c4207ff44
Signed-off-by: Terry Parker <tparker@google.com>
When fetching from a shallow clone, the client sends "have" lines
to tell the server about objects it already has and "shallow" lines
to tell where its local history terminates. In some circumstances,
the server fails to honor the shallow lines and fails to return
objects that the client needs.
UploadPack passes the "have" lines to PackWriter so PackWriter can
omit them from the generated pack. UploadPack processes "shallow"
lines by calling RevWalk.assumeShallow() with the set of shallow
commits. RevWalk creates and caches RevCommits for these shallow
commits, clearing out their parents. That way, walks correctly
terminate at the shallow commits instead of assuming the client has
history going back behind them. UploadPack converts its RevWalk to an
ObjectWalk, maintaining the cached RevCommits, and passes it to
PackWriter.
Unfortunately, to support shallow fetches the PackWriter does the
following:
if (shallowPack && !(walk instanceof DepthWalk.ObjectWalk))
walk = new DepthWalk.ObjectWalk(reader, depth);
That is, when the client sends a "deepen" line (fetch --depth=<n>)
and the caller has not passed in a DepthWalk.ObjectWalk, PackWriter
throws away the RevWalk that was passed in and makes a new one. The
cleared parent lists prepared by RevWalk.assumeShallow() are lost.
Fortunately UploadPack intends to pass in a DepthWalk.ObjectWalk.
It tries to create it by calling toObjectWalkWithSameObjects() on
a DepthWalk.RevWalk. But it doesn't work: because DepthWalk.RevWalk
does not override the standard RevWalk#toObjectWalkWithSameObjects
implementation, the result is a plain ObjectWalk instead of an
instance of DepthWalk.ObjectWalk.
The result is that the "shallow" information is thrown away and
objects reachable from the shallow commits can be omitted from the
pack sent when fetching with --depth from a shallow clone.
Multiple factors collude to limit the circumstances under which this
bug can be observed:
1. Commits with depth != 0 don't enter DepthGenerator's pending queue.
That means a "have" cannot have any effect on DepthGenerator unless
it is also a "want".
2. DepthGenerator#next() doesn't call carryFlagsImpl(), so the
uninteresting flag is not propagated to ancestors there even if a
"have" is also a "want".
3. JGit treats a depth of 1 as "1 past the wants".
Because of (2), the only place the UNINTERESTING flag can leak to a
shallow commit's parents is in the carryFlags() call from
markUninteresting(). carryFlags() only traverses commits that have
already been parsed: commits yet to be parsed are supposed to inherit
correct flags from their parent in PendingGenerator#next (which
doesn't happen here --- that is (2)). So the list of commits that have
already been parsed becomes relevant.
When we hit the markUninteresting() call, all "want"s, "have"s, and
commits to be unshallowed have been parsed. carryFlags() only
affects the parsed commits. If the "want" is a direct parent of a
"have", then it carryFlags() marks it as uninteresting. If the "have"
was also a "shallow", then its parent pointer should have been null
and the "want" shouldn't have been marked, so we see the bug. If the
"want" is a more distant ancestor then (2) keeps the uninteresting
state from propagating to the "want" and we don't see the bug. If the
"shallow" is not also a "have" then the shallow commit isn't parsed
so (2) keeps the uninteresting state from propagating to the "want
so we don't see the bug.
Here is a reproduction case (time flowing left to right, arrows
pointing to parents). "C" must be a commit that the client
reports as a "have" during negotiation. That can only happen if the
server reports it as an existing branch or tag in the first round of
negotiation:
A <-- B <-- C <-- D
First do
git clone --depth 1 <repo>
which yields D as a "have" and C as a "shallow" commit. Then try
git fetch --depth 1 <repo> B:refs/heads/B
Negotiation sets up: have D, shallow C, have C, want B.
But due to this bug B is marked as uninteresting and is not sent.
Change-Id: I6e14b57b2f85e52d28cdcf356df647870f475440
Signed-off-by: Terry Parker <tparker@google.com>
The bundle org.eclipse.jgit.java7 was removed in 4.0.
Remove references to it from the README.md.
Remove reference to it from org.eclipse.jgit.test/.project, which
causes an error message when opening the project in Eclipse:
Resource '/org.eclipse.jgit.java7' does not exist.
Change-Id: If0dbd562dcd60550bec3c0f793289474b7624bce
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
When doing an incremental fetch from JGit, "have" commits are marked
as "uninteresting". In a non-shallow fetch, when the RevWalk hits an
"uninteresting" commit it marks the commit's corresponding tree as
uninteresting. That has the effect of dropping those trees and all the
trees and blobs they reference out of the thin pack returned to the
client.
However, shallow fetches use a DepthWalk to limit the RevWalk, which
nearly always causes the RevWalk to terminate before encountering the
"have" commits. As a result the pack created for the incremental fetch
never encounters "uninteresting" tree objects and thus includes
duplicate objects that it knows the client already has.
Change-Id: I7b1f7c3b0d83e04d34cd2fa676f1ad4fec904c05
Signed-off-by: Terry Parker <tparker@google.com>
Previously jgit would attempt to clean git repositories that had not
been committed by calling a non-recursive delete on them, which would
fail as they are directories. This commit addresses that issue in the
following ways.
Repositories are skipped in a default clean, similarly to cgit and only
cleaned when the force flag is applied. When the force flag is applied
repositories are deleted using a recursive delete call. The force flag
and setForce method are added here to CleanCommand to support this
change.
Bug: 498367
Change-Id: Ib6cfff65a033d0d0f76395060bf76719e13fc467
Signed-off-by: Matthaus Owens <matthaus@puppetlabs.com>
This commit adds some test coverage to cleaning a repository with a
submodule, which did not previously exist.
Bug: 498367
Change-Id: Ia5c4e4cc53488800dd486f8556dc57656783f1c4
Signed-off-by: Matthaus Owens <matthaus@puppetlabs.com>
This prevents the warning:
Potential heap pollution via varargs parameter
The method doesn't do any casting of types that would cause the heap
pollution, so it should be safe to add @SafeVarArgs.
See [1] for information about this warning.
[1] http://stackoverflow.com/a/12462259/381622
Change-Id: Ic6d252915ea44b4f1c385afecb98906cd2c54382
Signed-off-by: David Pursehouse <david.pursehouse@gmail.com>
Gerrit's superproject subscription feature uses RefSpecs to formalize
the ACLs of when the superproject subscription feature is allowed.
As this is a slightly different use case than describing a local/remote
pair of refs, we need to be more permissive. Specifically we want to allow:
refs/heads/*
refs/heads/*:refs/heads/master
refs/heads/master:refs/heads/*
Introduce a new constructor, that allows constructing these RefSpecs.
Change-Id: I46c0bea9d876e61eb2c8d50f404b905792bc72b3
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
We had a case in Gerrits superproject subscriptions where
'refs/heads/' was configured with the intention to mean 'refs/heads/*'.
The first expression lacks the '*', which is why it is not considered
a wildcard but it was considered valid and so was not found early to be
a typo.
Refs are not allowed to end with '/' anyway, so add a check for that.
Change-Id: I3ffdd9002146382acafb4fbc310a64af4cc1b7a9
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Example usage:
$ ./jgit push \
--push-option "Reviewer=j.doe@example.org" \
--push-option "<arbitrary string>" \
origin HEAD:refs/for/master
Stefan Beller has also made an equivalent change to CGit:
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/299872
Change-Id: I6797e50681054dce3bd179e80b731aef5e200d77
Signed-off-by: Dan Wang <dwwang@google.com>
When Repository.close() decrements the useCount to 0 currently the cache
immediately evicts the repository from WindowCache and RepositoryCache.
This leads to I/O overhead on busy repositories because pack files and
references are inserted and deleted from the cache frequently.
This commit defers the eviction of a repository from the caches until
last use of the repository is older than time to live. The eviction is
handled by a background task running periodically.
Add two new configuration parameters:
* core.repositoryCacheExpireAfter: cache entries are evicted if the
cache entry wasn't accessed longer than this time in milliseconds
* core.repositoryCacheCleanupDelay: defines the interval in milliseconds
for running a background task evicting expired cache entries. If set to
-1 the delay is set to min(repositoryCacheExpireAfter, 10 minutes). If
set to 0 the time based eviction is switched off and no background task
is started. If time based eviction is switched off the JVM can still
evict cache entries if heap memory is running low.
Change-Id: I4a0214ad8b4a193985dda6a0ade63b70bdb948d7
Also-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Also-by: Hugo Arès <hugo.ares@ericsson.com>
Also-by: Sasa Zivkov <sasa.zivkov@sap.com>
If the client sent a well-formed enough request to see it wants to use
side-band-64k for status reporting (meaning its a modern client), but
any other command record was somehow invalid (e.g. corrupt SHA-1)
report the parsing exception using channel 3. This allows clients to
see the failure and know the server will not be continuing.
git-core and JGit clients send all commands and then start a sideband
demux before sending the pack. By consuming all commands first we get
the client into a state where it can see and respond to the channel 3
server failure.
This behavior is useful on HTTPS connections when the client is buggy
and sent a corrupt command, but still managed to request side-band-64k
in the first line.
Change-Id: If385b91ceb9f024ccae2d1645caf15bc6b206130
Some branches in WorkingTreeIterator.getIndexFileMode() have not been
covered by tests. Enhance the tests to increase test coverage.
Change-Id: I400a221048f0f6cbaa987350eaf998b0ebb50a4e
DfsGarbageCollector will now enforce a maximum time to live (TTL) for
UNREACHABLE_GARBAGE packs. The default TTL is 1 day, which should be
enough time to avoid races with other processes that are inserting
data into the repository.
Change-Id: Id719e6e2a03cfc9a0c0aef8ed71d261dda14bd0c
Signed-off-by: Mike Williams <miwilliams@google.com>
1f86350 added initial support for include.path. Relative path and path
with tilde are not yet supported but config load was failing if one of
those 2 unsupported options was encountered. Another problem was that
config load was failing if the include.path file did not exist.
Change the behavior to be consistent with native git. Ignore unsupported
or nonexistent include.path.
Bug: 495505
Bug: 496732
Change-Id: I7285d0e7abb6389ba6983e9c46021bea4344af68
Signed-off-by: Hugo Arès <hugo.ares@ericsson.com>
Treewalk has a member 'attr' which caches the attributes for the current
entry. We did not reset the cache always when moving to next entry. The
effect was that when there are no attributes for an entry 'a' but 'a'
was skipped by a Treewalk filter then Treewalk stopped looking for
attributes until TreeWalk.next() was called again.
Change-Id: Ied39b7fb5f56afe7a237da17801003d0abe6b1c7
Problem occurs when the checkout wants to create a file 'd/f' but
the workingtree contains a dirty file 'd'. In order to create d/f the
file 'd' would have to be deleted and since the file is dirty that
content would be lost. This should lead to a CheckoutConflictException
for d/f when failOnConflict was set to true.
This fix also changes jgit checkout semantics to be more like native
gits checkout semantics. If during a checkout jgit wants to delete a
folder but finds that the working tree contains a dirty file at this
path then JGit will now throw an exception instead of silently keeping
the dirty file. Like in this example:
git init
touch b
git add b
git commit -m addB
mkdir a
touch a/c
git add a/c
git commit -m addAC
rm -fr a
touch a
git checkout HEAD~
Change-Id: I9089123179e09dd565285d50b0caa308d290cccd
Signed-off-by: Rüdiger Herrmann <ruediger.herrmann@gmx.de>
Also-by: Rüdiger Herrmann <ruediger.herrmann@gmx.de>
The native wire protocol sends ref advertisements in the pkt-line
format, which requires encoding the ObjectId and ref name onto a byte
sequence. Busy servers show this is a very high source of garbage,
which pushes the garbage collector harder when there are many refs in
the repository (e.g. 70k, in a Gerrit managed repository).
Optimize the side band advertiser by retaining the CharsetEncoder,
minimizing the amount of temporary garbage built during encoding.
Change-Id: I406c654bf82c1eb94b38862da2425e98396134cb
Before this fix, ref directory removal did not work. That was because
the ref lock file was still in the leaf directory at deletion time.
Hence no deep ref directories were ever deleted, which negatively
impacted performance under large directory structure circumstances.
This fix removes the ref lock file before attempting to delete the ref
directory (which includes it). The other deep parent directories are
therefore now successfully deleted in turn, since leaf's content
(lock file) gets removed first.
So, given a structure such as refs/any/directory[/**], this fix now
deletes all empty directories up to -and including- 'directory'. The
'any' directory (e.g.) does not get deleted even if empty, as before.
The ref lock file is still also removed in the calling block's finally
clause, just in case, as before. Such double-unlock brought by this
fix is harmless (a no-op).
A new (private) RefDirectory#delete method is introduced to support
this #pack-specific case; other RefDirectory#delete callers remain
untouched.
Change-Id: I47ba1eeb9bcf0cb93d2ed105d84fea2dac756a5a
Signed-off-by: Marco Miller <marco.miller@ericsson.com>
Git servers supporting HTTP transport can send multiple WWW-Authenticate
challenges [1] for different authentication schemes the server supports.
If authentication fails now retry all authentication types proposed by
the server.
[1] https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2617#page-3
Bug: 492057
Change-Id: I01d438a5896f9b1008bd6b751ad9c7cbf780af1a
Signed-off-by: Christian Pontesegger <christian.pontesegger@web.de>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
When using a DfsInserter for high-throughput insertion of many
objects (analogous to git-fast-import), we don't necessarily want to
do a random object lookup for each. It'll be faster from the
inserter's perspective to insert the duplicate objects and let a later
GC handle the deduplication.
Change-Id: Ic97f5f01657b4525f157e6df66023f1f07fc1851
Git core learned about the submodule.<name>.shallow option in
.gitmodules files, which is a recommendation to clone a submodule
shallow. A repo manifest may record a clone depth recommendation as
an optional field, which contains more information than a binary
shallow/nonshallow recommendation, so any attempted conversion may be
lossy. In practice the clone depth recommendation is either '1' or doesn't
exist, which is the binary behavior we have in Git core.
Change-Id: I51aa9cb6d1d9660dae6ab6d21ad7bae9bc5325e6
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
Git core learned about attributes in pathspecs:
pathspec: allow querying for attributes
The pathspec mechanism is extended via the new
":(attr:eol=input)pattern/to/match" syntax to filter paths so that it
requires paths to not just match the given pattern but also have the
specified attrs attached for them to be chosen.
(177161a5f7, 2016-05-20)
We intend to use these pathspec attribute patterns for submodule
grouping, similar to the grouping in repo. So the RepoCommand which
translates repo manifest files into submodules should propagate this
information along. This requires writing information to the
.gitattributes file instead of the .gitmodules file. For now we just
overwrite any existing .gitattributes file and do not care about prior
attributes set. If this becomes an issue we need to figure out how to
correctly amend the grouping information to an existing .gitattributes
file.
Change-Id: I0f55b45786b6b8fc3d5be62d7f6aab9ac00ed60e
Signed-off-by: Stefan Beller <sbeller@google.com>
JGit failed to do checkouts when the index contained smudged entries and
autocrlf was on. In such cases the WorkingTreeIterator calculated the
SHA1 sometimes on content which was not correctly filtered. The SHA1 was
computed on content which two times went through a lf->crlf conversion.
We used to tell the treewalk whether it is a checkin or checkout
operation and always use the related filters when reading any content.
If on windows and autocrlf is true and we do a checkout operation then
we always used a lf->crlf conversion on any text content. That's not
correct. Even during a checkout we sometimes need the crlf->lf
conversion. E.g. when calculating the content-id for working-tree
content we need to use crlf->lf filtering although the overall operation
type is checkout.
Often this bug does not have effects because we seldom compute the
content-id of filesystem content during a checkout. But we do need to
know whether a file is dirty or not before we overwrite it during a
checkout. And if the index entries are smudged we don't trust the index
and compute filesystem-content-sha1's explicitly.
This caused EGit not to be able to switch branches anymore on Windows
when autocrlf was true. EGit denied the checkout because it thought
workingtree files are dirty because content-sha1 are computed on wrongly
filtered content.
Bug: 493360
Change-Id: I1072a57b4c529ba3aaa50b7b02d2b816bb64a9b8
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
As per [1], but limited to absolute paths indeed. No support yet for
tilde or $HOME expansion. Support for the --[no-]includes options
([1]) is not part of this commit scope either, but those options'
defaults are in effect as described in [1].
[1] https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config
Included path can be a config file that includes other path-s in turn.
An exception is thrown if too many recursions (circular includes)
happen because of ill-specified config files.
Change-Id: I700bd7b7e1625eb7de0180f220c707d8e7b0930b
Signed-off-by: Marco Miller <marco.miller@ericsson.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
Added the option to retrieve either merge or non-merge commits in the
LogCommand.
Change-Id: Ie0e1c515a823f2392783f1a47d385c31230e8167
Signed-off-by: Alcemir Santos <alcemir.santos@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
There was a bug regarding how JGit handled untracked files when applying
a stash. Problem was that untracked files are applied by doing a merge
of HEAD and untrackedFiles commit with a merge base of the stashed HEAD.
That's wrong because the untrackedFiles commit has no parent and
contains only the untracked files. Using stashed HEAD as merge base
leads to unneccessary conflicts on files not event included in the
untrackedFiles commit.
Imagine this graph directly before you want to apply a stash which was
based on 0. You want to apply the stash on current HEAD commit 5.
5 (HEAD,master)
/
0---+
\ \
1---3 (WIP on master)
/
2 (untracked files on master)
Imagine for a specific (tracked) file f
- commit 0 contains X
- HEAD contains Y
- commit 2 (the untracked files) does not contain file f
A merge of 2 and 5 with a merge base of 0 leads to a conflict. The 5
commit wants to modify the file and the 2 commit wants to delete the
file -> conflict.
If no merge base is set then the semantic is correct.
Thanks to Bow for finding this bug and providing the test case.
Bug: 485467
Change-Id: I453fa6ec337f81b2a52c4f51f23044faeec409e6
Also-by: Bow Ruggeri <bow@bow.net>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
When performing a "reset --hard" a checkout is done. The pathes are
checked for potential checkout conflicts. But in the end for all
remaining conflicts these files are simply deleted from the working
tree. That's not the right strategy to handle checkout conflicts during
"reset --hard". Instead for every conflict we should simply checkout the
merge commit's content.
This is different from native gits behavior which reports errors when
during a "checkout --hard" a file shows up where a folder was expected.
"warning: unable to unlink d/c.txt: Not a directory"
Why it is like that in native git was asked in
http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/279482. Unless
it is explained why native git why this error is reported JGit should
overwrite the files.
Bug: 474842
Change-Id: I08e23822a577aaf22120c5137eb169b6bd08447b
Signed-off-by: Matthias Sohn <matthias.sohn@sap.com>
git-apply allows modifying file modes in patched files using either
"new mode" or "new file mode" headers. This patch adds support for
setting files as executables and vice-versa.
Change-Id: I24848966b46f686f540a8efa8150b42e0d9c3ad1
Signed-off-by: Nadav Cohen <nadavcoh@gmail.com>